Puzzling Imperfection

In the dark of his room, after much wiggling and whirring, he gets quiet. Then there’s a small voice in the darkness next to me.

“Do you know what Ryan said?”

“What?” I ask.

He is quiet for a while.

Then, “He said I was a dumb puzzle maker.”

This is not what I expected him to say.

I’m overwhelmed by so many emotions – surprise, anger, but mostly sadness. Why does this have to start so early?

He lamented shortly after starting at this new preschool last month that he didn’t have any friends. We had a good talk about that and he has overcome it and I think he feels he has some friends there now. Evidently Ryan isn’t one of them.

He has described this puzzle to me – it’s a new one, featuring crocodiles and snakes and a striped tortoise. He quite likes it.

“Why did he say that to you?” I ask, as my brain jumps ahead to an appropriately motherly response to this confession.

“Because I didn’t know where all the pieces went.”

He’s three. And he’s actually quite good at puzzles. (And here’s where I attempt to repress my inappropriately motherly comment about how apparently he’s not good enough by Ryan’s standards.)

We talk about it. Yes, it hurt his feelings. No, he didn’t say anything in response. He was nervous. It made him sad.

It makes me sad too.

heart-puzzle

Image credit: Alfonsina Blyde on Flickr

I offer suggestions about how he can deal with this type of situation. Remind him he’s good at lots of things and he can remember that even when someone else says something mean. Offer over-his-head suggestions about why people say things like that to others.

It all sounds hollow. Insufficient. A stretch.

What I really want to say is, “It breaks my heart to know that someone said something to you that made you sad. I want to protect you from that so you never have to feel that way again.”

But I can’t, so I don’t.

“Can we keep talking about this?” he asks. His voice is small.

Of course we can, I tell him.

Even though I don’t know what else to say.

 

Reset

The last couple of weeks have been rough. After Michael’s accident we had family members flying all over the place, which my anxiety really didn’t like (especially when it involved putting my 72-year-old father on a plane for a 24-hour trip to Australia). He got there all right, but then Michael passed away and we started an overwhelming game of Should We or Shouldn’t We Go to Australia for the Funeral.

We didn’t go.

It was agonizing. I couldn’t imagine not going, and yet I couldn’t quite figure out how we’d make it work either. I’ve been so sick so far this pregnancy that a 24-hour trip seemed like the World’s Worst Idea. I could have gone, of course, and would have, but we also didn’t want to totally overwhelm everyone by showing up a day before the funeral with a three-year-old in tow.

In the end, we decided we will be the second wave of support and go down in a few weeks (with my other sister) when things have calmed down and my sister and brother-in-law are trying to adjust to their new normal. In the meantime, we’ve sent texts and messages—by the hundreds, it seems—and if waves of love can reach that far they’ll have had an ocean’s worth.

Now the funeral is done. Friends and family have spoken words of love and Michael’s school mates formed an honour guard for him as he left the cemetery. Those of us here have had our own moment to remember him and we now exist in that space between blessed closure and enduring disbelief. We continue to ask why, but an answer never comes.

Until today, half of my family was in Australia (more than half, actually). My brother also went for a quick down-and-back to help my dad and youngest sister travel comfortably home. (Working for an airline has its benefits.) Much to everyone’s relief, they’re just arriving home after another 24-hour trip in a very short span of time.

There is no pause button in this life. And try as I might, I haven’t been able to find any sort of rewind button either. So for the moment, I have chosen to hit reset. Instead of being in perpetual limbo—waiting for what?—I declared Easter weekend a weekend to go out of town. We got out of the house, where we’ve been sitting waiting for the phone to ring or the next text message to wing its way across the world, and spent some time in the mountains.

More on that later, but in the meantime I’ll say this: It helped.

Canadian-Rockies

On Just.Be.Enough – Pregnancy and Worthiness

Remember when I revealed this pregnancy and made reference to my unexpected reaction to it? I thought I’d write about it sooner but so much has been going on and, honestly, I wasn’t really ready to try and describe it. I’ve been thinking about it again lately though, and decided it was time to tell that story. So today on Just.Be.Enough I’m hosting the Be Enough Me link-up and telling you about how I felt unworthy of being given a chance to become a mom again.

Come and visit me over there!

Comments here closed.

I’m a Syndicated Poet

I bet you didn’t know I was a poet. Actually, I’m not. But I did try my hand at a sestina (a structured poem) and figured I’d enter it in the BlogHer poetry contest.

And whaddya know – I won! Pretty cool, right?

Come read it!

syndicated_on_BlogHer

In the SIM

In my job I get to do some cool things. Like pilot a flight simulator.

flight simulator

That is not an actual runway – it’s a computer screen. But all the details of the airport and the surrounding landscape are bang on. The SIM is set up to exactly replicate the flight deck of a jet and the whole thing moves, so all the motion feels really real. Which is especially fun when you’re taxiing down the runway at a good clip (and are pregnant and already nauseated).

Did you know you can do a barrel roll in a 737? Apparently you can. Who knew?

sideways-landscape

Well…you can if you don’t over-correct and clip the wings off.

crash

Whoops. I guess we’re done here.

(Yes, the tech is laughing at me.)

But he gave me another chance. The magic of a flight simulator is that you can bing yourself back up into the air and position yourself wherever you want to be. Groovy.

landing-the-sim

That’s me getting ready to land in Vancouver. (Or YVR in airport lingo.) We buzzed downtown, scared a few office workers and then landed nicely right in the middle of the runway. Or slightly to the left. Or whatever. (Hey, at least I didn’t end up on the grass, and I didn’t take out any landing gear.)

Our lovely tech decided to give my colleague a challenge – landing in “weather.”

weather_SIM

Can you see the runway? Yeah, me neither. (It’s not visible until about 100 feet, or, you know, right before you’re about to hit the ground. Fun times.)

Conclusion: totally fun but I am never going to be a pilot.

Mama’s Losin’ It
Sharing an Instragram photo (and a few others) with Mama Kat.

If you want to see a video of a 737 doing a loop de loop, you can see one on my Facebook page.